Should I open or buy a Raising Cane's franchise in 2027?
*Published 2026-06-04 · Updated 2026-06-04*
Direct Answer
Probably not — unless you already own a Raising Cane's restaurant, sit inside Todd Graves's tight circle of legacy partners, or are bringing a master-franchise deal in a country where Cane's wants to enter. As of mid-2026, Raising Cane's is effectively closed to new U.S. Franchisees.
The brand is company-operated by design, with fewer than 50 franchised units out of 900+ system locations and a stated push to 1,000 U.S. Restaurants and $10B in systemwide sales by 2030 funded almost entirely by corporate capital. If a unit ever does surface for resale or as part of an international master deal, expect $1.8M–$4.3M all-in, $45,000 franchise fee, 5.0% royalty, 3.5% ad fund, $1.5M net worth / $750K liquid minimums, and a 3.5–5 year payback on a healthy $5M+ AUV box.
The Real Numbers
Raising Cane's publishes its Franchise Disclosure Document (FDD) through the FTC franchise registry, with the 2026 FDD (filed April 2026) the most recent benchmark. The numbers below blend FDD Item 5 (fees), Item 6 (royalty/ad), Item 7 (initial investment range), and Item 19 (financial performance representations) with **Circana's April 2026 Definitive U.S.
Restaurant Rankings** for AUV verification.
| Line item | Low end | High end | Source |
|---|---|---|---|
| Initial franchise fee | $45,000 | $45,000 | FDD Item 5, 2026 |
| Land / site acquisition | $0 (ground lease) | $1,200,000 (purchase) | FDD Item 7 |
| Building & site work | $850,000 | $1,750,000 | FDD Item 7 |
| Kitchen equipment & POS | $350,000 | $475,000 | FDD Item 7 |
| Signage, decor, drive-thru tech | $90,000 | $165,000 | FDD Item 7 |
| Opening inventory & smallwares | $35,000 | $55,000 | FDD Item 7 |
| Training & travel | $25,000 | $75,000 | FDD Item 5/7 |
| Pre-opening labor & marketing | $80,000 | $200,000 | FDD Item 7 |
| Working capital (3 months) | $250,000 | $400,000 | FDD Item 7 |
| Total initial investment | $1,775,000 | $4,365,000 | FDD Item 7 |
| Royalty on gross sales | 5.0% | 5.0% | FDD Item 6 |
| National brand fund | 3.5% | 3.5% | FDD Item 6 |
| Reported AUV (Circana 2026) | $5.4M | $6.3M | Circana DR2026 |
| Restaurant-level EBITDA margin | 17% | 22% | Operator reports |
| Year-1 cash flow (mature site) | $900K | $1.4M | Item 19 inference |
| Payback period | 3.5 years | 5.0 years | Operator math |
Note the spread. A conversion or end-cap inline at $1.8M is the floor; a freestanding 4,500-sq-ft prototype with double drive-thru on owned land in a high-cost MSA pushes to $4.3M. The 8.5% combined royalty + ad load is above the QSR median of 7.5% but the AUV premium more than compensates.
Cane's reports a $6.3M system AUV (Circana, April 2026), which is roughly 2.4x the Chick-fil-A non-mall benchmark of $9.0M only on the very top end and 3x to 4x the Popeyes and KFC benchmarks. For comparison, McDonald's U.S. AUV sits near $3.8M, Chipotle near $3.2M, and Wingstop near $1.9M.
Who Wins With This Business
The Raising Cane's operator profile is not the typical first-time franchisee. Winners share six traits.
- Existing Cane's tenure. The handful of true franchisees — concentrated in Hawaii (Restaurants of Hawaii LLC), Kuwait (Alshaya Group), the UAE, Bahrain, and Saudi Arabia — got their deals 15+ years ago and are renewing, not new entrants.
- $5M+ net liquid capital beyond the FDD's $750K liquid minimum. Cane's wants multi-unit developers, not single-store operators.
- Restaurant operating depth. Graves's bar is prior QSR P&L ownership at a chain doing $4M+ AUV — Chick-fil-A operators, McDonald's multi-unit owners, In-N-Out alums.
- Real estate command. Winners bring sites, not ask for them. The brand prefers freestanding parcels on signalized intersections near big-box retail or interstate exits.
- 80-hour-a-week willingness for the first 18 months. Cane's culture demands owner-operator presence, not absentee.
- Geographic patience. International master-franchisees commit to 20-50 unit development agreements over 7-10 years — a $50M+ aggregate buildout.
If you check all six, you are not reading a blog post to evaluate this opportunity — you are already in a closed-door conversation with Brent Wertz, Cane's Chief Restaurant Officer, or A.J. Kumaran, Co-CEO.
Who Loses With This Business
Most prospects who chase Cane's lose money on the chase itself — application fees, broker retainers, travel — and never get a slot. The other failure modes for those who do:
- Underestimating land + build cost in 2026-2027 markets. Construction inflation pushed Cane's prototype build from $1.4M (2022) to $2.1M (2026). Markets like Manhattan, Bay Area, Boston push past $3.5M just for shell + equipment.
- Royalty + ad fund stack at 8.5%. This is 150 bps above the QSR median. Operators who pencil deals at 7% royalty assumptions blow the model.
- Single-protein menu risk. Cane's sells only chicken fingers, fries, slaw, Texas toast, and a sauce. A 2027 avian-influenza outbreak, chicken cost spike, or Gen-Z protein-rotation trend hits Cane's harder than diversified menus.
- Labor model is rich. Cane's runs higher labor-as-percent-of-sales than peers (~30% vs. 25% QSR median) because the brand sells crew-experience as a differentiator. Operators who slash crew hours destroy the comp.
- Build-out delays. Permit timelines in Texas, California, and Florida have stretched to 14-18 months — every month of pre-opening rent without revenue is $25K-$45K down the drain.
- Misreading the franchise availability signal. Brokers and listing aggregators still rank Cane's as "available" based on stale 2018 FDDs. The brand has declined to open new U.S. Franchise development since approximately 2015.
2027 Market Conditions
The chicken-fingers QSR segment is the single fastest-growing QSR category in the United States heading into 2027 — Technomic projects 8.4% CAGR through 2030 vs. 3.2% for total QSR. Cane's is the category leader by AUV, with Slim Chickens, Huey Magoo's, Layne's Chicken Fingers, and PDQ competing for the regional whitespace Cane's hasn't filled.
Key 2027 dynamics:
- Cane's reported $6.0B in systemwide sales in 2025 (Restaurant Business, March 2026), up 47% from $4.1B in 2023, and Graves told *QSR Magazine* he is targeting $10B by 2030.
- 100 new U.S. Units in 2026 and 125+ planned for 2027, including the Nashville Lower Broadway flagship opened January 2026.
- International expansion accelerating — UK first opening targeted late 2026 with Alshaya, Mexico City through a new master franchisee announced February 2026.
- Bird-flu volatility. USDA reported 42 commercial poultry outbreaks in Q1 2026, pushing wholesale chicken tender pricing from $2.10/lb (2024) to $3.40/lb (peak Feb 2026). Cane's hedges through multi-year contracts with Tyson, Wayne-Sanderson, and Pilgrim's Pride, but margin compression hits all operators.
- AI-driven drive-thru — Cane's announced a 2026 pilot with Presto Automation for voice-AI order-taking in 50 units; full rollout targeted 2028.
- Regulatory pressure. California's AB 1228 fast-food council set the QSR minimum wage at $22/hour effective April 2026 with annual increases tied to CPI — pushing California Cane's labor cost 18% above national average.
- Saturation map. Cane's is heavily penetrated in Texas, Louisiana, Oklahoma, Arkansas, Mississippi; under-penetrated in the Northeast, Pacific Northwest, and Upper Midwest — but those whitespace markets are corporate-development priority, not franchise zones.
The 90-Day Decision Tree
If you genuinely fit the profile above and are pursuing either a resale, international master, or adjacent-brand alternative, here is the concrete pre-purchase walk.
- Days 1-7 — Get the current FDD. Request the April 2026 FDD through the FTC Franchise Rule registry or your state's franchise registration office (CA, IL, MD, MN, NY, ND, RI, SD, VA, WA, WI register at the state level). Read Items 5, 6, 7, 19, 20 cover to cover.
- Days 8-14 — Validate liquidity. Pull a personal financial statement (PFS) showing $1.5M+ net worth and $750K+ liquid, then add a $500K cushion because Cane's underwriting is conservative.
- Days 15-21 — Engage a franchise attorney. Spend $8K-$15K with a specialist — Carmen Caruso (Chicago), Marks & Klein (NJ), or Cheng Cohen (Chicago) — to interpret the FDD. Do not use your general business lawyer.
- Days 22-30 — Talk to existing franchisees (Item 20). The FDD lists every franchisee. Call 5-10 of them. Ask: *real Year-1 cash flow, real build-out cost, franchisor support quality, ROFR enforcement*.
- Days 31-45 — Site or resale sourcing. If new build, bring 3 vetted sites with demographic packs (3-mile pop, median HHI, daytime population, traffic counts). If resale, engage a restaurant broker — Restaurant Brokers International or We Sell Restaurants — and underwrite at 2.0-2.5x trailing EBITDA.
- Days 46-60 — Build the pro forma. Three scenarios: base ($5.4M AUV, 19% EBITDA), upside ($6.3M AUV, 22%), downside ($4.2M AUV, 14%). Stress-test labor at California AB 1228 rates and chicken at $3.50/lb.
- Days 61-75 — Financing. Get SBA 7(a) pre-qualification through Live Oak Bank, Celtic Bank, Byline Bank, or Huntington — all top-5 SBA QSR lenders. Cane's deals typically run 30% equity, 70% debt at prime + 2.75%.
- Days 76-85 — Final discovery day. If invited (rare), travel to Plano HQ for the Cane's discovery day. Expect a deep operations interview with A.J. Kumaran or a senior development VP.
- Days 86-90 — Sign or walk. Sign the franchise agreement and development agreement OR walk with a clean no-fee exit. Do not let sunk-cost bias close a marginal deal.
Alternative Plays
If Cane's is closed to you — and statistically it is — these adjacent franchises offer the same chicken-fingers tailwind with actually-open franchise development.
- Slim Chickens — $45K franchise fee, $1.3M-$2.6M total, 6% royalty + 4% ad, $2.4M-$3.1M AUV. Aggressively developing through 150+ multi-unit operators.
- Huey Magoo's Chicken Tenders — $30K fee, $750K-$1.6M total, 5% royalty + 2.5% ad, $1.6M-$2.1M AUV. 170+ units with strong Southeast white-space.
- Layne's Chicken Fingers — $40K fee, $850K-$1.95M total, 6% royalty + 2% ad, $2.0M AUV. Texas-based, aggressive 2026-2027 development.
- PDQ (People Dedicated to Quality) — $50K fee, $1.4M-$3.2M total, 5% royalty + 4% ad, $2.8M AUV. Slower growth but premium positioning.
- Wingstop — different protein but best-in-class franchise economics: $20K fee, $400K-$1.1M total, 6% royalty + 5% ad, $1.9M AUV, 40%+ cash-on-cash returns.
- Bonchon — Korean fried chicken, $40K fee, $400K-$1.7M total, 5% royalty + 2% ad, $1.5M AUV. Strong urban/suburban fit.
- Dave's Hot Chicken — $50K fee, $1.0M-$2.4M total, 7% royalty + 3% ad, $2.6M AUV, fastest-growing emerging brand in QSR.
The cleanest analog to Cane's economics with an actually-open development pipeline is Slim Chickens for multi-unit operators or Dave's Hot Chicken for single-unit entrants with brand-heat appetite.
FAQ
Can I actually buy a Raising Cane's franchise in 2027?
Almost certainly not. Raising Cane's has not opened new U.S. Franchise development since approximately 2015, and the company has publicly stated its preference for company-operated growth to fund the path to 1,000 U.S. Units and $10B in systemwide sales by 2030.
The only realistic entry paths are (1) acquiring an existing franchised unit from a legacy franchisee (rare, subject to Cane's right of first refusal), or (2) bringing a large international master-franchise deal in a country Cane's wants to enter.
What is Raising Cane's actual royalty and ad fund stack?
The 2026 FDD discloses 5.0% royalty on gross sales plus 3.5% national brand fund, for an 8.5% combined ongoing fee load. This is roughly 150 basis points above the QSR median of 7.0%, but Cane's offsets it through category-leading AUVs of $5.4M-$6.3M per Circana's April 2026 Definitive U.S.
Restaurant Rankings. The royalty does not include local marketing minimums (1%-2% additional), technology fees (~$1,200/month), or insurance pass-through.
What does a single Raising Cane's restaurant actually earn?
A mature Cane's unit on the system's $6.3M AUV benchmark generates approximately $1.1M-$1.4M in restaurant-level EBITDA at a 17%-22% margin. After debt service on a $2.5M SBA 7(a) loan at prime + 2.75%, owner take-home typically lands at $650K-$950K annually. Cash-on-cash return for a freestanding prototype runs 25%-35%, with a 3.5-5 year payback on the all-in investment.
Who actually owns the franchised Cane's units that exist today?
The bulk of franchised Raising Cane's restaurants sit with Restaurants of Hawaii LLC (Hawaii), Alshaya Group (Kuwait, UAE, Bahrain, Saudi Arabia, and UK rollout), and a small number of legacy U.S. Operators in Louisiana, Mississippi, and Tennessee who signed agreements before Cane's pivoted to company-owned growth.
None of these operators are actively reselling as of mid-2026 — these are long-term family or institutional holdings.
What is the most profitable Cane's-alternative franchise in 2027?
By cash-on-cash return, Wingstop is the unambiguous winner — $400K-$1.1M total investment with $1.9M average AUV and operator-reported 40%+ cash-on-cash returns, driven by a delivery-heavy, smaller-footprint, lower-CapEx model. By AUV-to-investment ratio, Slim Chickens offers the closest Cane's analog at scale.
By brand heat, Dave's Hot Chicken leads — it added 180+ units in 2025 alone.
Bottom Line
Raising Cane's is the strongest single-unit QSR economic model in the United States, and you almost certainly cannot buy one. Pursue a U.S. Resale, an international master deal, or Slim Chickens / Dave's Hot Chicken / Wingstop — those are the actionable plays in 2027.
Move forward only if you have $5M+ liquid, prior multi-unit QSR P&L ownership, and a site or resale already sourced.
Sources
- Raising Cane's 2026 Franchise Disclosure Document — Items 5, 6, 7, 19, 20 (filed April 2026, FTC franchise registry)
- Circana — Definitive U.S. Restaurant Rankings 2026 (April 2026, AUV benchmark data)
- Restaurant Business Online — "Raising Cane's sales are going through the roof" (March 2026)
- QSR Magazine — "Raising Cane's Founder Todd Graves Is on a Journey to Inspire" (2026)
- Technomic Top 500 Chain Restaurant Report 2026 (chicken-fingers segment CAGR)
- International Franchise Association (IFA) 2026 Economic Outlook (QSR franchise benchmarks)
- Franchise Times Top 400 (2026 edition) — Raising Cane's systemwide sales ranking
- USDA NASS Poultry Slaughter Reports (Q1 2026 avian influenza commercial outbreak data)
- U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics — Quarterly Census of Employment and Wages (QSR labor benchmarks, 2026)
- California AB 1228 Fast Food Council — minimum wage schedule (effective April 2026)
- SBA 7(a) Lender Match data 2026 — Live Oak, Celtic, Byline, Huntington QSR lending volumes
- Inc. Magazine — "How Raising Cane's Founder Todd Graves Built a $5 Billion Brand" (Rob Walker, 2026)
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